Description
The mid-19th century was a period of intense global upheaval, where revolutionary ideals swept across Europe and challenged long-standing imperial frameworks. Remember ’48 delivers a thorough, data-driven historical audit tracking the rise of the Young Ireland movement as they sought to establish an independent republic during the height of the Great Famine.
The text looks deeply into declassified police records, seditious newspaper runs, and personal exile diaries to evaluate the practical functional operations of the confederate clubs. The authors systematically guide researchers through the deployment of new national symbols—including the first presentation of the tricolor flag—and the tactical bottlenecks encountered during the Ballingarry skirmish. Written with absolute clarity, this premium book stands as an indispensable reference manual for advanced nineteenth-century history tracks, political geographers, and research archives.
Core academic frameworks preserved within this study:
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Revolutionary Logistics Analytics: Breaks down specific club membership metrics, clandestine weapon manufacturing accounts, and communication chains across provinces.
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Socio-Political Fracture Mapping: Documents the intense debates between advocates of peaceful constitutional agitation and the proponents of immediate physical force.
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Gold-Standard Scholarly Quality: Meticulously annotated with deep primary state trials, original manifestate citations, and comprehensive bibliography indices.






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